Radiation and Climate

Ilias Vardavas and Frederic Taylor

Description

Radiation theory and measurements are at the core of the climate change debate. This new book describes in detail the basic physics used in radiative transfer codes that are a key part of climate prediction models. The basic principles are extended to the atmospheres of the Earth and the other planets, illustrating the greenhouse effect and other radiation-based phenomena at work. Several chapters deal with the techniques and measurements for monitoring the Earth's radiation budget and thus tracking global change and its effects. Remote sensing instruments on satellite and the theory of remote sensing are also covered. The book is the first comprehensive new publication on atmospheric radiation in more than a decade, and the first to link the theoretical and
experimental aspects of the subject to the contemporary climate problem.

Radiation and Climate

Ilias Vardavas and Frederic Taylor

Author Information

Professor Ilias M. Vardavas works in for the department of physics at the University of Crete. Professor Frederic W. Taylor is the Halley Professor of Physics in the Atmospheric Oceanic and Planetary Physics department at the University of Oxford.